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ART OF VIDEO GAMES Pop Culture Smithsonian exhibit makes Ohio debut at TMA. By Jeff McGinnis, page 6 June 22, 2014 Best Weekly Newspaper in Ohio FREE • ToledoFreePress.com Connect with us: A Toledo tradition since 2005 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013 Ohio Society of Professional Journalists Awards Military Yearbook and Red, White & You, Too! Tom Pounds on this year’s tribute to the armed forces and Michael S. Miller on this summer’s Red Cross CD. page 3 Opinion Community Business Star Honored Fire Station No. 3 rededicated in the memory of fallen fire- fighters Stephen Machcinski and James Dickman. page 9 Heart to Hart Hart names Randy Phipps executive creative director. page 14 Sand-Tastic! Summer festival returns to Levis Commons. page 15 Military Yearbook and Red, White & You, Too! Tom Pounds on this year’s tribute to the armed forces and Michael S. Miller on this summer’s Red Cross CD. page 3 Honored Fire Station No. 3 rededicated in the memory of fallen fire- fighters Stephen Machcinski and James Dickman. page 9 Heart to Hart Hart names Randy Phipps executive creative director. page 14 Smithsonian exhibit makes Ohio debut at TMA. By Jeff McGinnis, page 6 Sand-Tastic! Summer festival returns to Levis Commons. page 15 JUNE 27 - 28 2014 Sand Sculpting Chalk Art Live Music and More!
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This edition features ART OF VIDEO GAMES: Smithsonian exhibit makes Ohio debut at TMA. By Jeff McGinnis (see page 6). Military Yearbook and Red, White & You, Too! Tom Pounds on thi syear's tribute to the armed forces and Michael S. Miller on this summer's Red Cross CD. (see page 3). Honored: Fire Station No. 3 rededicated in the memory of fallen firefighters Stephen Machcinski and James Dickman (see page 9). Sand-Tastic! Summer festival returns to Levis Commons (see page 15)
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Page 1: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

Art of video gAmesPop Culture

Smithsonian exhibit makes Ohio debut at TMA. By Jeff McGinnis, page 6

June

22,

201

4 Best WeeklyNewspaper in Ohio

FREE • ToledoFreePress.com

Connect with us:

A Toledo tradition since 2005

2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013 OhioSociety of Professional Journalists Awards

Military Yearbook and Red, White & You, Too!Tom Pounds on this year’s tribute to the armed forces and Michael S. Miller on this summer’s Red Cross CD.

page 3

Opinion

Community

Business

Star

HonoredFire Station No. 3 rededicated in the memory of fallen fire-fighters Stephen Machcinski and James Dickman.

page 9

Heart to HartHart names Randy Phipps executive creative director.

page 14

Sand-Tastic!Summer festival returns to Levis Commons.

page 15

Military Yearbook and Red, White & You, Too!Tom Pounds on this year’s tribute to the armed forces and Michael S. Miller on this summer’s Red Cross CD.

page 3

HonoredFire Station No. 3 rededicated in the memory of fallen fire-fighters Stephen Machcinski and James Dickman.

page 9

Heart to HartHart names Randy Phipps executive creative director.

page 14

Smithsonian exhibit makes Ohio debut at TMA. By Jeff McGinnis, page 6

Sand-Tastic!Summer festival returns to Levis Commons.

page 15

JUNE27 - 28

2014

Sand Sculpting

Chalk Art

Live Music

and More!

Page 2: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.comA Toledo tradition since 2005 June 22, 2014Toledo Free Press2

Limited Time Offering. Price and Participation may vary. Valid at all participating restaurants in the Greater Toledo, Ohio area. See restaurants for details. ©2014 Burger King Corporation®. All Rights reserved.

SoftServe

Cone or Cup

JuSt$1.00

Enjoy thEsEgrEat dEals!

Page 3: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

Publisher’s statement

Newspaper people measure time not just by hours and weeks and months, but issue to issue. So it should not surprise me that our edito-rial staff is assembling our third annual Military Yearbook issue, but

somehow that “third” is a jarring reminder of how quickly time passes.Compiling these annual Toledo Free Press Military Yearbooks has been

a humbling experience. Talking about service, dedication and sacrifice is easy; working with the men and women who live those ideals in-spires gratitude and humility.

We are soliciting photos and messages from regional servicemen and servicewomen — at no charge to the families — to be com-piled in our special issue.

To be included, email a high-resolution photo of the military member along with a short message to [email protected] by June 24. Also include the member’s full

name, rank and military branch with each photo. Submissions can be of cur-rent military members or veterans.

There are an estimated 80,000 veterans in the eight-county area served by our regional Veterans Affairs offices. Add to that the number of active military members and guardsmen and you have more people to thank than you will ever be able to reach one at a time. In the Military Yearbook, to be published June 29, you will see scores of local men and women who proudly wear the uniform of the United States military. You will see photos of service members in faraway deserts, a world removed from their family and civilian lives. As the father of a serviceman, Army Cpl. Austin Pounds, I know we pray for the safe return of each and every one of them.

The stories in this upcoming issue — the brainchild of Toledo Free Press media writer Jeremy Baumhower and the product of Managing Editor Sarah Ottney and Project Editor Amanda Tindall — offer a glimpse into the ser-vices offered to our active military members and our veterans by several groups run by people who approach their work with the same righteousness and generosity as the people they serve.

We greatly appreciate the people who will share stories, send in photos and bare their souls to impart their wisdom. We thank the advertisers who are signing up to support this issue, especially Newsradio 1370 WSPD, Co-lumbia Gas of Ohio and the American Red Cross of Northwest Ohio. Each of these groups made time and brainpower investments that helped us plan this special coverage.

On the verge of our country’s July 4 birthday, we stop to reflect on our freedoms, liberties and the countless lives cut short so that we may carry on.

We stop to think about the families without fathers and sons, without mothers and daughters. We stop to think about the bodies without limbs and minds without peace. This issue is our modest effort at saying thank you.

Thank you for your service, your dedication and your sacrifice. O

Thomas F. Pounds is president and publisher of Toledo Free Press. Contact him at [email protected].

Military Yearbook:call for submissions

Thomas F. Pounds

ToledoFreePress.com A Toledo tradition since 2005June 22, 2014 Opinion 3

After compiling nearly a dozen CDs of local music for charity, the question I am most frequently asked is, “Aren’t you running out of local bands

to include?”As this summer’s “Red, White & You,

Too!” CD demonstrates, the sonic answer is a resounding “No!”

There are some musicians I lean on be-cause I am a fan and it is an honor to work with them, even as a passive facilitator; Kerry Patrick Clark, Kyle White, Pat Dailey, Jeff Stewart, Carmen Miller, Mike “Mad Dog” Adams and TAPESTRY are just a few of my favorites. Another, Eddie Boggs, passed away this year, but will still be represented on the CD.

Many of those stalwarts are included on “Red, White & You, Too!” (100 percent of sales benefit the area’s Red Cross military services and disaster relief services) but it is exciting to report the CD is rife with artists making their Toledo Free

Press CD debut: Fish Fisher, Birds of Chicago, Nathan Roberts & The New Birds, Tropic Bombs, Zak Ward,

Thirsty Houligans, Bob Stevens and Scott Fish and Distant Cousinz.

For last summer’s inaugural Red Cross CD (which includes tracks by Chrys Pe-terson, The Bradberries, Crystal Bowersox, Alyson Stoner and several more artists and is also available in limited quantities this summer), I relied mostly on cover tunes. But as local bands began submitting songs this year, it became clear that the quality of their original recordings was so strong, the ma-terial could stand on its own; it may sound

odd, but I am proud of each track, from its writing to its production. You will hear songs on “Red, White & You, Too!” that are better than most of what you will hear on mainstream radio this summer.

DON LEE

LIGHTING THE FUSE

Red, white & you, too

Michael S. miller

n miller CONTINUES ON 4

A publication of Toledo Free Press, LLC, Vol. 10, No. 25. Established 2005.

Thomas F. Pounds, President/[email protected]

Toledo Free Press is published every Sunday by Toledo Free Press, LLC, 605 Monroe St., Toledo, OH 43604. Subscription rate: $100 /year. Reproduction or use of editorial or graphic content in any manner without permission is strictly prohibited. Copyright 2014, all rights reserved. Publication of advertisements does not imply endorsement of advertisers’ goods or services.

Michael S. Miller, Editor in [email protected]

PRODUCTIONChristie Materni, Photographer

EDITORIALJames A. Molnar, Design [email protected] Ottney, Managing [email protected] McGinnis, Pop Culture [email protected]

STAFF WRITERS [email protected] Brandi Barhite • Jeremy Baumhower • Jim Beard • Jay Hathaway Vicki L. Kroll • Don Lee • Matt Liasse • Danielle Stanton • Duane Ramsey

Chris Kozak, Staff Writer Emeritus • Lisa Renee Ward, Staff Writer Emeritus

COPY EDITORS/PROOFREADERSDarcy Irons, Marisha Pietrowski, Gary Varney

ADVERTISING SALESJohn McNamara, Sales Manager [email protected] • (216) 406-6384Renee Bergmooser, Senior Sales Representative [email protected] • (419) 266-0254Chick Reid, Sales Representative [email protected] • (419) 705-5396Grant Grisier, Sales Representative [email protected] • (419) 574-2856

DISTRIBUTION (419) 241-1700, Ext. [email protected]

ADMINISTRATIONPam Burson, Business [email protected]

Page 4: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.comA Toledo tradition since 2005 June 22, 2014Opinion4

2014 Military Yearbook

On June 29, 2014, Toledo Free Press will publish

its third annual Military yearbook.

We are soliciting photos and messages for

regional servicemen and women at no charge

to the families, to be compiled in our special

issue. It will also contain a veterans resource

guide, features on local veterans services and

more. This will be a souvenir issue for everyone

who supports the U.S. Armed Services.

For more details, email [email protected]

Make sure your business is represented in this special issue with an ad message for our troops.

Free!No charge to run

your soldier’s photo!

Capt. Steven J. SaxionArmor Officer in Iraq, Germany and Afghanistan; awarded the Bronze Star. Currently in South Korea.

Best wishes and God bless you as you continue your Army career. O

1st Lt. Casie E. SaxionCompleting training at Ft. Hood in Killeen, Texas.Will treat active duty and veteran soldiers at Ft. Knox in Kentucky.

Congratulations and God bless you as you continue your Army career. O

Sample messages

For more details, email [email protected]

30 For Internal Use Only

Region and chapter lockups

Chapter lockups should always use the horizontal button logo with the chapter name in Georgia Regular on one or two lines of type.

Do not attempt to make your own lockup or lock up the chapter name with any other logo version.

Chapter lockups are available in spot color, RGB and CMYK formats.

All fi eld lockups can be downloaded from Brand Central.

Serving Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino Counties

Greater Chesapeake and Potomac Blood Services Region

Serving Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino Counties

Type centerson cross

Serving the Bay Area

San Francisco Chapter

Mid-Florida Region

Serving the Bay Area 80% (4/5) XX 1/2 X

One-line region and chapter lockup

Alignment

Two-line region and chapter lockup

Northwest Ohio Region

Deadline for yearbook submissions

is Tuesday, June 24.

Among the many highlights of the 21-track CD are two songs by Fish and Distant Cousinz that highlight a recent local story that made international head-lines. “Marlee’s Freedom” and “Lucky Day” are about the children of Tiffany Eckert and Army Sgt. Andy Eckert, who was killed in Iraq in 2008. The story of daughter Marlee’s connection to freedom and the tale of son Myles finding $20 and “paying it forward” to Lt. Col. Frank Dailey are recounted on the CD’s bonus tracks, both with the blessing and input of Tiffany. It’s a fun and summery CD, but these two tracks serve to remind us why it exists.

I always appreciate Put-in-Bay’s “Christmas in July” weekend, so a brief interlude on the disc provides music for that event; the rocker “Christmas in Killarney” by Extra Stout and the original “Xmas in Jail” by Thirsty Houligans linger on the season just long enough to make you want to take a sprig of mis-tletoe to the beach.

In two weeks, Project Editor Sanya Ali will present a special issue with stories on the musicians who contributed to the CD and a look at the work of the local Red Cross. In the meantime, stop by any area Big Boy or Ralphie’s restaurant starting next week and get your copy; it’s $10 for 21 tracks, and there’s a $4 Big Boy/Ralphie’s coupon inside.

Great local music, great local meals and a great local cause ... is there a better way to enjoy summer? O

Michael S. Miller is editor in chief of Toledo Free Press and news director of News-radio 1370 WSPD. Email him at [email protected].

n MILLER CONTINUED FROM 3

TO THE EDITOR,

As is well known by now, the Lucas County Republican Party is in disarray, as evidenced by the June 11 reorganization meeting. As back-ground, I am the 59-year-old grand-mother knocked to the ground by “security” at that meeting. While that incident is interesting, what led up to it is what’s important.

It started early when party Chairman Jon Stainbrook’s people were checking in central committee precinct people. Observers and other duly elected cen-tral committee people (other than his) were barred from entering the building. Fortunately, TV cameras showed up and that practice ended.

When checking in central committee representatives, some people (Stain-brook’s friends) received orange lan-yards. I did not receive a lanyard. I asked Meghan Gallagher and Kelly Bensman why I did not get a lanyard and I was sub-jected to more verbal assault by their se-curity people and threatened with being thrown from the building.

After the meeting was called to order, things started to go downhill fast. New rules were introduced without the opportunity to review them. The new rules were read aloud by the chair, Gal-lagher, who only recognized “orange lanyard” committee people to speak and ignored the rest of the assembled central committee folks.

Our voices were strategically ig-nored. Did we get loud? Yes, what else could we do to try to represent our districts if we were excluded from par-ticipating? It was at this time that some

longtime officeholders, Rob Ludeman, Lynn Olman and probably a dozen other prominent Republicans, left in disgust, some of them tearing up their certificates saying they couldn’t be a part of the fiasco.

The “security” consisted of really big guys in tight black T-shirts de-signed to show off their muscles. But that wasn’t enough; they also openly carried guns, Tasers and handcuffs. I believe they were there to intimidate the central committee people without the lanyards because they only ha-rassed those of us who did not get a lanyard. I believe that was also part of Stainbrook’s strategy. Some of the security folks said they were only fol-lowing orders when questioned as to why they were acting as they were to those of us without lanyards.

From the beginning, I was targeted by security. I was pushed around and told to shut up and sit down, even as the lanyard people were free to do as they pleased. I was repeatedly threat-ened with being thrown out of the building. I was told there were re-stricted areas I could not be in even though “orange lanyard” central committee people were there. I was threatened verbally all night long. I was pushed forcefully on more than one occasion. At one point, Central Commission Vice Chairman Jonathan Anderson slapped my cellphone out of my hand. It landed 3 feet away on the floor with the cover knocked off of it.

After Stainbrook had won his vote, I left the meeting for a couple of minutes and went outside for a breath of fresh air; when I attempted

to return to the meeting, I was met by Alex Rivera and three big guys with guns. I showed my credentials, explaining (yes, loudly, because they were shouting in my face) that I had not only the right, but also the ob-ligation to my precinct to be in that meeting. Then I was gang-pushed to the door and knocked to the ground. Another gentleman, even though he was following orders from “security,” was pushed to the ground as well. All of this is documented on videotape. Police and EMT were called. You can see this at http://www.lcrp2014.com/.

I am relatively new to politics. I am only doing this because I think my grandkids deserve better. I am shocked at the way this unfolded. I did nothing to deserve being treated that way. The people of Lucas County deserve better.

So what’s the solution? More

people have to get involved. We need more people to stand up against this kind of politics. We do not have to

settle for politics as usual. There are simple ways to help change the status quo: get involved as a precinct person and get active in a local Republican club. Stay informed by getting on the Northwest Ohio Conservative Coali-tion email list at www.nwohiocc.com.

While all of this is interesting, and might be dismissed as in-party faction disagreements, I believe the most im-portant part of the meeting was when Ludeman and the others walked out because they do not want to be part of this lawless organization. It’s not just a faction in the party dispute.

The bottom line is this: Amid this turmoil, why would good people be inspired to run for office as a Republican? Why would donors contribute money?

DIANA SKAFFJerusalem 1 Precinct

Lucas County Republican Party

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Lucas County Republican Party discourages candidates, donors

“ I am only doing this because I think

my grandkids deserve better. I am shocked at the way this unfolded. I did nothing to deserve being treated that way.

The people of Lucas County deserve better.”

Page 5: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.com A Toledo tradition since 2005June 22, 2014 Opinion 5m

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Page 6: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.comA Toledo tradition since 2005 June 22, 2014Community6

By Jeff McGinnisToledo Free Press PoP CulTure ediTor

[email protected]

For more than a century, the Toledo Mu-seum of Art (TMA) has served as one of the most prominent jewels in the Glass City’s ar-tistic crown. Wandering its galleries, visitors are treated to a representative sampling of the works of some of the greatest names their mediums had ever known. Rubens. Rembrandt. El Greco. Miyamoto. Kojima. Levine.

If those last few names seem out of place, per-haps the newest exhibition at TMA will help to change your mind. Beginning June 19, the mu-seum’s Canaday Gallery became home to a show that spotlights the creative output of a canvas

which has heretofore been left unchronicled within many galleries: Interactive media. Play-able narratives. “The Art of Video Games.”

“The key to what the exhibition is about is in the title,” TMA Director Brian Kennedy said during a news conference with reporters on June 17. “It’s about, in a sense, in question, to what extent do you believe that video games are art, and what is the art form in video games?”

Smithsonian debut“The Art of Video Games” exhibit is in many

ways the brainchild of Chris Melissinos, former chief evangelist and chief gaming officer for Sun Microsystems. Working with the Smithsonian Institution, Melissinos crafted the show to dem-onstrate the evolution of gaming over a 40-year

period, emphasizing how games grew, not just graphically, but artistically.

“A whole new culture has been estab-lished,” Kennedy said in an interview with Toledo Free Press. “Gaming is a usage of tech-nologies to do something that we’ve never been able to do in this way before. And then, out of that, come certain artists that become very, very well known. And yet most of them, I don’t think, have yet emerged. This is such a new format.”

The exhibit was designed to tell the story of game development by dividing it into in-dividual eras, with kiosks representing 20 different platforms. Art and videos showing examples of games that defined their time period are on display at each station. These

representatives were voted on by the public, with players around the world choosing which titles best exemplified each era.

Five games are made available to be played by visitors: the original “Pac-Man,” “Super Mario Bros.,” the adventure game “The Secret of Monkey Island,” the groundbreaking point-and-click title “Myst” and the offbeat and beautiful PlayStation 3 title “Flower.”

“The Art of Video Games” was wildly pop-ular during its initial run at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. “This exhibition was one of the most successful exhibitions in Washington at the Smithsonian — actually, the most successful exhibition they’ve had,” Kennedy said.

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Page 7: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.com A Toledo tradition since 2005June 22, 2014 Community 7

“And it just attracted people be-cause there hadn’t been an exhibition on the art of video games.”

Back in timeStepping into the exhibit, as it now

stands in the Toledo Museum of Art, is less like walking into a gallery and more like traveling back in time to an arcade. The first sight is a 10-foot-high projection screen, showing Pac-Man wandering his trademark maze. The sounds of Mario collecting coins and stomping on enemies dominate the space as you wander the gallery. The entire experience is like being in-side echoes of gaming’s past.

The look and feel of the show is quite deliberate, explained Amy Gilman, the museum’s associate di-rector and point curator for “The Art of Video Games.” “I just have to give a little shout-out to our exhibi-tion’s designer, Claude Fixler, who is the one who really works with each curator on the different shows, to come up with different ways of displaying for that show. And we do, we spend a lot of time thinking, ‘What is the best way for this show to be seen here in Toledo?’

“And with this exhibition, we had seen it in other venues, and the place that we saw it last was in a much larger

space, it was more spread out. And we thought that, actually, for us to really make it more of a tight show, [we kept it] enough like an arcade that you im-mediately go there in your mind. We wanted it to be a little loud, we wanted it to feel a little visually crazy and all of that. And that’s a really important quality to video games, but it’s also an important quality to the experience of the exhibition.”

It’s a little jarring for someone familiar with the space — and with the museum in general — to see the transformation. Just a few months ago, the Canaday Gallery was home to a showing of works from the Tu-ileries Gardens of the Louvre. To see it as it is now might strike some as a vulgar offense to their delicate ideas of what “art” is.

But to Gilman, that contrast is crucial to the museum’s mission.

“For the museum, it’s really im-portant that over time we have a really broad range of offerings for our visi-tors,” Gilman said to the gathered re-porters. “And that means reaching out into communities that are not neces-sarily served by being our core audi-ence, but it also means that we like to provide all our visitors with really dif-ferent experiences.”

n VIDEO GAMES CoNTiNued FroM 6

n VIDEO GAMES CoNTiNues oN 8 n “shEnMuE,” yu suzuki, DirEctor anD proDucEr; yoichi takahashi, DEsiGnEr; EiJi oGawa, writEr, sEGa DrEaMcast, 2000.

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Page 8: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.comA Toledo tradition since 2005 June 22, 2014Community8

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For anyone who lived through the console eras represented, the exhibit is certainly a genuine shot of nostalgia — a factor Gilman and her colleagues recognize.

“The fact that we chose to use Mario and Pac-Man as our graphics for this show is about the nostalgia for that period in video gaming that is very much alive today. So one of the things that’s very important to know is, this exhibition isn’t about showcasing the next latest game from Nintendo, or Wii or whatever, and being the launch for that. It’s actually about looking at the progression in a way that we who play video games in our basements probably don’t get a chance to do.”

It’s against the nature of the show — and indeed the medium it rep-resents — to only dwell on the past, however. The four corners of the room are dominated by large projection screens where visitors can play one of the interactive titles, arranged chrono-logically. To see the progression of play

— from “Mario,” where the goal is to stomp enemies and save the princess, to “Flower,” where you flutter on the breeze to invigorate a dying landscape — it’s hard not to see how narrative and genuinely artistic ideas have taken root for players the world over.

“With heightened, almost virtual reality, or hyperrealism in video capa-bility now, we understand that it is more visually complex and that narratives are more complex, etc. But you don’t actu-ally see how different it is in that pro-gression, because we don’t actually look at it in that way,” Gilman said.

“So bringing them in here, and you being able to start with the most pixelated, some of the most beloved, like Pac-Man. And you progress, and you can see them next to each other, you really get a sense of ... not just the technical advances, but really, how vi-sually and narratively complex things have become.”

“The Art of Video Games” is on display at the Toledo Museum of Art from now through Sept. 28. Admis-sion is free. O

n VIDEO GAMES CoNTiNued FroM 7

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Page 9: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.com A Toledo tradition since 2005June 22, 2014 Community 9

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[email protected]

Fire Station No. 3 in North To-ledo was rededicated June 16. But the celebratory mood at the station that many fought hard to save was tempered by the fact that two of its members, Stephen Machcinski and James Dickman, won’t be there when the renovated station returns to service.

“It’s a day of mixed emotions, but we’re trying real hard to make it a good, positive, happy day,” said Toledo Fire & Rescue Department (TFD) Chief Luis Santiago. “Having the families of Steve and Jamie here, that’s what really helps.”

The two Toledo firefighters were

killed Jan. 26 from injuries sustained while fighting an apartment fire in North Toledo.

The owner of the building, Ray Abou-Arab, is facing charges of arson and murder.

The $2.8 million project, located on Bush and Erie streets, renovated the existing firehouse and added a 7,000-square-foot addition. The sta-tion contains sleeping quarters, a dual-purpose lounge area/training room, a full kitchen and dining area. The station’s former garage doors were transformed into large bay win-dows. It’s the only TFD station to have an elevator.

“The blend between the old and new is just amazing,” Santiago said after the ceremony.

PUBLIC SAFETY

Fire Station No. 3 rededicated to two fallen firefighters

n StAtIOn nO. 3 CoNTiNues oN 10 n tFD FirE station no. 3 on Bush strEEt in north tolEDo was rEDEDicatED DurinG a cErEMony JunE 16.

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Page 10: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.comA Toledo tradition since 2005 June 22, 2014Community10

Remembrances of the fallen fire-fighters pervaded the ceremony, and the station is full of permanent re-minders. Each speaker referenced them, a memorial plaque hangs in the kitchen and another memorial plaque, donated by the builders, was unveiled during the ceremony.

The plaque in the kitchen features photos of the two fallen firefighters and the words “We Remember.” A carved stone plaque placed in the back wall of the garage bay by the site’s work crews reads, “In Memory of Stephen Machcinski and James Dickman, Last Alarm 1-26-2014, From the Crew that Built This House.”

“It’s beyond description,” Santiago said of the stone from the builders. “They did that out of their own initiative. They really took our loss hard as well.”

Mark Pitchford of Toledo-based Willson Builders recalled frequent in-teractions with the firefighters of engine company No. 3. The crew has operated out of Station No. 13 on Front Street in East Toledo since the Bush Street sta-tion was closed in September 2012 over safety concerns due to a buckling floor and other structural issues.

“On any given day it was not un-common to see the No. 3 drive by two, three, sometimes more times a day on their way to or coming back from a run, always looking and waving as we

would all do the same back to them,” Pitchford said during the ceremony.

“The Monday of Jan. 27, it was different. It was quiet inside this house. They drove by, still re-sponding to calls, but no one was waving, not in the trucks or on the job site. On the job site we all felt the loss as well. We all felt we needed to do something to honor them.”

The workers decided to place a plaque between the back garage doors “to show that Jamie and Steve are watching this place until you get back home safe,” Pitchford said.

Among the speakers was Mayor D. Michael Collins, who began his re-marks by addressing the Machcinski and Dickman families.

“This is a very challenging moment for each of you, collectively and inde-pendently,” Collins said. “However, I think if we look into the recesses of our hearts we will know that two brave men are smiling and looking down upon us today with a sense of pride.”

Instead of a ribbon-cutting, fire-fighters used the Jaws of Life to cut a red metal bar.

Former Toledo Mayor Mike Bell, a retired TFD chief who was once stationed at Station No. 3, was also in attendance. North Toledo resi-dents Miriam Miller and her son-in-law Harold Gibson made paper signs they placed in front of the station that read: “Ladder #3, In Memory

of Our Fallen Heros” and “Welcome Home No. #3, Thank You!”

“It’s heartwarming,” Miller said of the station reopening. “It feels so good to have our firefighters back, but so hard to lose two of them.

“It’s so beautiful,” Miller said, of the refurbished structure. “It was so terrible looking [before].”

Another nearby resident, Tina Pe-tersen, said she attended the dedica-tion ceremony to check out the new building as well as express her grati-tude to the Machcinski and Dickman families in person. Petersen had a sei-zure in January and a TFD EMT crew responded. A few days later, one of her neighbors recognized the EMTs who had come to her house in a news story about the fatal Jan. 26 fire.

“I wanted to let them know what it meant to me,” Petersen said.

“It’s going to be so much better [in the neighborhood] with the fire sta-tion back,” she added.

Santiago called the station an “an-chor” of the neighborhood.

“This is a very proud section of Toledo,” Santiago said. “They thought it was very, very important to have this not only maintained but refurbished and updated.”

TFD initially planned to repur-pose the Bush Street station and build a new Station No. 3 at Jamie Farr Park in North Toledo, Santiago said. However, many community

members along with several Toledo City Council members and then-Mayor Bell fought for the station to be repaired and reopened.

“We didn’t think that made sense,” said United North CEO Terry Glazer, who called the renovation and up-coming reopening “a great victory.”

“Not only did we save an old his-torical building, but kept a fire station at that location where there will con-tinue to be a relationship between fire-fighters and neighbors,” Glazer said.

More positive changes will soon come to the neighborhood with con-struction plans for a new No. 12 fire sta-tion in North Toledo and the purchase of the nearby Summit Street YMCA by To-ledo Public Schools (TPS), Glazer said.

“We’re gaining two fire stations as part of the solution and now TPS is buying the YMCA. That’s happening right down the block,” Glazer said. “It all just dovetails into a bigger strategy so we’ve had some real vic-tories in that neighborhood.” O

n STATION NO. 3 CONTINUED FROM 9

n TFD ChieF Luis sanTiago embraCes greg anD LinDa DiCkman, The parenTs oF FaLLen FireFighTer James DiCkman, in FronT oF a sTone memoriaL pLaque unveiLeD aT sTaTion no. 3 in norTh ToLeDo on June 16.

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LocaL musicians ✯21 tracks ✯$10CD Includesa $4 Coupon for Big Boy/Ralphie’s

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Publishing Credits

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2. Wouldn’t It Be Nice 2:22 (Brian Wilson,

Tony Asher, Mike Love, Rondor Music) //

3. August In Ohio 3:43 (Kyle White; Used

by Permission) // 4. (Sittin’ On) The Dock

Of The Bay 3:32 (Otis Redding/Steve Cropper,

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3:51 (Crystal Bowersox;

Used by Permission)

Executive Producer:

Michael S. MillerEditor in Chief, Toledo Free Press

Cover illustration by Don Lee

Package design by James A. Molnar and American Red Cross

Dedicated to the Summer Fun Crew: Shannon Scott Miller, Evan Miller and Sean Miller

THANK YOU: Dozens of artists joined to bring this concept to life. We thank and appreciate every one of

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22); Kerry Patrick Clark (tracks 9, 19); Jeff Stewart (tracks 4, 21); Tim Yenrick; Amanda Aldrich; Ken Robinson;

Peggy Holewinski; Rob Armstrong; Dan Davis; Scott Boos; Kellie Holeman; Bob Chirdon; Andi Roman and Toledo

Mud Hens; Dustin Hostetler; E.J. Wells; Chrys Peterson; LuAnne Hodges; Alyson Stoner; Bob Davenport; Tom Brady;

Gina Orr; Crystal Bowersox; Josh Whitney; Mary Ann Stearns; Tom Pounds; and everyone who contributed to this CD.

Publishing Credits

1. Take Me Out To the Ballgame 0:44

(1908, Jack Norworth and Albert Von Tilzer) //

2. Wouldn’t It Be Nice 2:22 (Brian Wilson,

Tony Asher, Mike Love, Rondor Music) //

3. August In Ohio 3:43 (Kyle White; Used

by Permission) // 4. (Sittin’ On) The Dock

Of The Bay 3:32 (Otis Redding/Steve Cropper,

Warner Chappell/Universal Music Publishing) //

5. Summertime Serenade 4:14 (Matt Sayers; Used by

Permission) // 6. California Sun 2:50 (Henry Glover/

Morris Levy, EMI Longitude Music) // 7. Help Me

Rhonda 2:44 (Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Rondor

Music) // 8. Frogtown Stomp 2:29 (Jon Kuhlman;

Used by Permission) // 9. Girls In Their Summer

Clothes 3:59 (Bruce Springsteen, Bruce

Springsteen) // 10. Sweet 3:53 (Alyson

Stoner, Ryan Liestman and Michael Bland;

Used by Permission) // 11. Sacred

Groove 4:08 (Bob Davenport/

Carmen Miller/Matt Schmidt; Used by Permission) //

12. Don’t Stop Believin’ 4:26 (Steve Perry,

Neal Schon, Jonathan Cain, Lacey Boulevard

Music/Wizen Music Publishing) // 13. Put-In-

Bay 3:23 (Pat Dailey; Used by Permission.) //

14. Who Needs Margaritaville (We Got Put-In

Bay) 3:33 (Mike “Mad Dog” Adams; Used by

Permission) // 15. Another Put-In-Bay Summer

2:18 (Eddie Boggs; Eddie Boggs Productions;

Used by Permission) // 16. All Night Long 3:40 (Tom

Clawson; Used by Permission) // 17. Needles And Wax

3:10 (Timothy David Richissin; Used by Permission) //

18. Live It Up 4:11 (Reece Dailey; Used by

Permission) // 19. Summertime 4:15 (George

Gershwin, Ira Gershwin, DuBose Heyward)

// 20. Tiki Hut 3:22 (Brad Bury; Used by

Permission) // 21. Little One 4:19 (Jeff

Stewart; Used by Permission) // 22. Lost

Lagoon 3:20 (Bob Milano; Used by

Permission) // 23. Holy Toledo

3:51 (Crystal Bowersox;

Used by Permission)

Executive Producer:

Michael S. MillerEditor in Chief, Toledo Free Press

Cover illustration by Don Lee

Package design by James A. Molnar and American Red Cross

Dedicated to the Summer Fun Crew: Shannon Scott Miller, Evan Miller and Sean Miller

THANK YOU: Dozens of artists joined to bring this concept to life. We thank and appreciate every one of

them, with special thank yous to: Mighty Wyte; Larry Meyer; Brett Dennison of Firefly Studios (tracks 6, 7, 12,

22); Kerry Patrick Clark (tracks 9, 19); Jeff Stewart (tracks 4, 21); Tim Yenrick; Amanda Aldrich; Ken Robinson;

Peggy Holewinski; Rob Armstrong; Dan Davis; Scott Boos; Kellie Holeman; Bob Chirdon; Andi Roman and Toledo

Mud Hens; Dustin Hostetler; E.J. Wells; Chrys Peterson; LuAnne Hodges; Alyson Stoner; Bob Davenport; Tom Brady;

Gina Orr; Crystal Bowersox; Josh Whitney; Mary Ann Stearns; Tom Pounds; and everyone who contributed to this CD.

NW Ohio artists unite to benefit

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Page 11: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.com A Toledo tradition since 2005June 22, 2014 Community 11

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Page 12: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.comA Toledo tradition since 2005 June 22, 2014Outdoor Oasis12

n EMILY LAMB, A RESIDENT OF BARTLEY LOFTS IN DOWNTOWN TOLEDO, SITS BY THE ROOFTOP POOL THAT IS POPULAR WITH RESIDENTS.

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Downtown dwellers enjoy rooftop ‘backyards’By Sarah OttneyTOLEDO FREE PRESS MANAGING EDITOR

[email protected]

A pool, a patio, a grill, a garden, a place for your dog to romp — all evoke the pleasures of a spacious sub-urban backyard. But many Downtown residents have made their own private “backyard” oases in an unlikely loca-tion — building rooftops.

When her husband first pro-posed leaving their South End home to move Downtown, Janet Albright resisted.

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But he did — a building on South St. Clair Street with a flat roof, perfect for starting a garden. They’ve lived there now for more than 10 years and Albright is a Downtown convert — in large part due to her rooftop “sanctuary,” a popular gathering place for family and friends.

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Page 13: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.com A Toledo tradition since 2005June 22, 2014 Outdoor Oasis 13

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n LA SALLE APARTMENTS RESIDENTS NICK AMRHEIN, LEFT, AND MICHAEL SEAY ENJOY THE DOWNTOWN BUILDING’S ROOFTOP PATIO.

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She and her husband, Richard Rideout, live on the top floor of the three-story building and lease the other two floors. Transforming the building into their dream home was a “labor of love,” but worth the effort, Albright said.

“The cool part for us was we had a blank canvas,” Albright said.

Today, their private rooftop features potted herbs and flowers along with a deck, dining area, refrigerator, grill, bar, TV and more. They even have trees — two hardy corkscrew willows. Her blue-berry bush didn’t survive the winter, but her rose bushes are blooming. The only thing she doesn’t have is vegetables.

“My one sore spot,” Albright said. “I cannot get them to grow. It’s not them; it’s me.”

The couple’s “backyard” is a pop-ular gathering spot for family func-tions; there’s even been a wedding held there.

“It’s like a sanctuary,” Albright said. “It’s no different than having a great backyard and hanging out on your patio when you live in the sub-urbs, but mine’s up four stories up and I have a beautiful view of the city. We can see all the bridges and have a beautiful view of the river.”

This summer, the rooftop deck is being remodeled so Albright isn’t able to utilize the area as much as she’d like.

“I am in absolute withdrawal right now,” she said.

A few blocks away on Washington Street, residents at Bartley Lofts were hanging out at their rooftop pool.

“The pool really sealed the deal for me,” said resident Kate Kelley. “It was a big selling point. My husband said, ‘Oh, boy.’ He knew we weren’t going any-where else once I saw that.”

Kelley, who works Downtown as a financial adviser for New York Life Insurance Company, traded a two-hour commute in downtown Balti-

more for a two-minute commute in Downtown Toledo.

The rooftop lounge area also fea-tures a grill and periodic wine tastings, Kelley said.

“Everyone congregates here in the summertime. You get to know people. It’s like ‘Melrose Place’ in a good way,” she joked. “You make a lot of friends up here — and a lot of friends in the city when you tell them you have a pool.”

Having a great vantage point for fireworks is another perk of access to a Downtown rooftop, said Bartley Lofts resident Emily Lamb.

“Fourth of July is perfect,” she said. “You can see the Mud Hens as well as Downtown, Maumee, everywhere.”

A Downtown building with a rooftop patio offers “the best of both worlds” — walking distance to coffee shops, bars and restaurants, but also a “backyard” oasis to hang out in at home, Kelley said.

“I spend a lot of time up here,” she said. “I’m spoiled by the view and the pool.”

A few blocks away, Isaiah Harris, 16, who is living in Toledo for the summer with his dad at La Salle Apartments on Adams Street, said he likes to use the rooftop for entertaining friends. The spacious patio that stretches the full length of the building.

“It’s really nice when you have visi-tors,” he said.

But his favorite part of his Toledo backyard is watching sunsets.

“The one thing I love personally is watching the sun turn different colors,” Harris said. “It’s just amazing.”

La Salle resident Jasmine Cogdell likes to use the roof to write songs and play with her Yorkshire puppy, Tokyo.

Even though it’s a shared space, it feels private because most people keep to themselves, Cogdell said.

“I come up here to write, to drink. It’s peaceful,” said Cogdell, a Bowling

Green State University student studying special education. “I like to sit up here and chill. It’s nice to have this.”

La Salle resident Michael Seay also enjoys the roof as much as possible.

“I live up here in the summer,” said Seay, who said he likes to grill out and entertain guests. “It’s nice to be Down-town. I live here for convenience, for getting around.”

His roommate, Nick Amrhein, a photographer, said he likes to uti-lize the rooftop for photoshoots.

The Commodore Perry Apart-ments on Jefferson Avenue doesn’t have a rooftop patio, but is “very pet-friendly” and offers a small private “dog park” area for resident dogs to interact and do their business while their owners to sit and talk, said resi-dent Kristen Mollenkopf.

Aaron Bonnough moved Down-town to the Standart Lofts about two months ago because he wanted a change. He was a little afraid he would miss his Springfield Township back-yard, but now he says he shouldn’t have worried.

“There are aspects I do miss about having a backyard, but there’s so much space up here. I was surprised how much,” Bonnough said from the rooftop patio of the Erie Street apartment building, which features patio furniture and a large grill. “I miss having a lawn — but I don’t miss having to mow it.

“It’s a nice atmosphere to hang out in. I haven’t used the grill yet, but people are always up here,” Bon-nough said.

Albright said she loves living Downtown and has no plans to leave.

“Anybody who has anything nega-tive to say about Toledo, I’d like them to come to my home and stand on my roof and have a nice glass of wine or an iced tea and they will understand why it’s a great city,” Albright said. “It’s what you make of it.” O

n LA SALLE RESIDENT JASMINE COGDELL WITH HER DOG, TOKYO.

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Page 14: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.comA Toledo tradition since 2005 June 22, 2014Business Link14

Knowing Tomorrow's Endeavors TODAY.Tune in with your MEGA Host Lord Jeffrey Potter

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By Sanya AliToledo Free Press sTaFF WriTer

[email protected]

An executive creative director at an advertising company as far-reaching as Hart must possess a mix of passion, creativity and leadership.

Randy Phipps said he fills all those criteria. The former senior art director for the company took over the creative director slot June 2.

“It’s coming home, but, at the same time, it’s a fresh start,” Phipps said.

President and CEO Mike Hart said he is glad to have Phipps back at the company.

“We’ve followed Randy’s career and are pleased to have him back to lead our creative team,” Hart said in a news release. “Long ago, I learned that beneath Randy’s easygoing nature is a talented dynamo.”

Phipps grew up in Butler, Pennsylvania, just north of Pittsburgh. His mother was an artist, and her creative inclination inspired him to pursue an artistic career.

“She did it because she was passionate about it and she passed that passion on to me,” Phipps said. “Ever since I was young, I did a lot of drawing, a lot of creative thinking. It naturally kind of fell into place for me when I got to college.”

Phipps attended Kent State University, where he majored in visual communication design. He found his calling when he joined Hart as a young businessman.

“There’s a competitive nature to who I am, so that fits well into the advertising world,” Phipps said.

From 1998-2006, Phipps worked at Hart as se-nior art director.

“It was a little more hands-on, the day-to-day of creating designs and messages (compared to his new role),” Phipps said.

In 2006, Phipps decided to transfer to Toledo-based brand agency NORTH, which sent him across the globe for assignments.

“Pretty much, you can put a dot on a map and I’ve been there,” Hart said. “There was a lot of world travel. That was intriguing.”

During his time abroad, Phipps worked on material and communications for the Sochi Olympic Games, the Australian Open and the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia. Once he had explored the world, he decided he needed a change of pace.

“I was ready to move past that and move into a stronger role,” Phipps said. “The travel was exciting, but, once I fed that need, it was nice to be back. I can focus on doing great work and being with family.”

As executive creative director, Phipps has broader control and an overseer role.

Phipps’ goal at Hart is simple: Bring out the best in the company.

“It’s really to bring the creativity to a higher level and bring a little bit of international feel and flavor that I’ve gained through my previous job to Hart,” Phipps said. “It’s not a whole lot more difficult than that, elevating the level of work.”

Phipps said he sees a few challenges ahead of him. He said Hart has one of the largest teams and one

of the largest client bases in Northwest Ohio. “Being on top of design, marketing and mes-

saging trends across a vast number of clientele is probably the biggest challenge,” Phipps said.

Phipps said his positions at Hart have been ideal, because the company offered him the opportunity to do what he loves and meet quality people.

“Being in a great town where I can raise my family but at the same time do tremendous work and work with tremendous people, this would be my dream job,” Phipps said.

Phipps’ family includes his wife and son, who he said were very excited about the career move.

“They were glad that I came back,” Phipps said. “They know a lot of people here and we’ve made a lot of connections with people here at Hart over the years.”

Phipps prides himself on both his work and his ability to maintain healthy social relationships out-side of the workplace.

“There’s a sense of professionalism that comes with being in the position that I’m in,” Phipps said. “To be able to be in this position and to maintain a

good working relationship and friendships is what I’m most proud of. My job is what I do, but it doesn’t define who I am. The friendships I have built, that’s what I’m most proud of.”

Phipps said young professionals should consider all ideas before deciding to act in professional situations.

“Always keep an open mind,” Phipps said. “Great ideas can come from anyone, anywhere at any time. To have an open mind and always listen before you speak, that would be one of the best pieces of advice.”

Phipps said he is grateful Hart gave him such a warm welcome.

“I missed being here after I had left,” Phipps said. “Even though I had some great experiences and great professional times and I grew in those times, I always had a longing to go back.” O

PEOPLE

Hart names Phipps executive creative director

As artists line the streets of To-ledo with their work June 26, guests of EPIC Toledo’s latest event will be meeting, racing and finding clues they’ll use to explore the city.

Sara Swisher, director of EPIC, said the T-Town Dash will provide an environment to foster social and professional connections. Cost is $15.

“The T-Town Dash is an oppor-tunity for young professionals in the community to come down and experience Downtown Toledo in the summer during an Art Walk,” Swisher said. “There’s a lot of people down here and it’s a good oppor-tunity to learn about the different things Downtown has to offer.”

Swisher said she wants interns

and employees who have not yet discovered Toledo, especially those who are from out of town, to take advantage of this occasion.

“I hope they take back to ev-eryone that there are great things going on in Downtown Toledo,” Swisher said. “It’s a very vibrant and exciting place to be.”

As advisory council chair for the dash, Jessica Sloan is in charge of a lot of the delegation and planning of the event. She said her goals are similar to Swisher’s.

“[Toledo] is really a place you can make a life,” Sloan said. “It’s a great town. I’d really like a lot of people to come and see what Toledo has to offer.” O

— Sanya Ali

EPIC plans networking event for young professionals

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Page 15: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

Sand-TaSTic!

JUNE 22, 2014

By Jordan FinneyToledo Free Press sTaFF WriTer

[email protected]

Eight-ton sand sculptures and two 8-foot sidewalk chalk murals will be on full display at the fourth annual Sand-Tastic! festival, hosted June 27-28 by The Town Center at Levis Commons in Perrysburg.

“Northwest Ohio as a whole is a very artsy area,” said Casey Pogan, marketing director for Levis Com-

mons. “We have the Crosby Festival, the Black Swamp Arts Festival… our area really thrives on art. Sand-Tastic! has morphed into something that’s still fun, but artsy.”

Chad Hartson, owner of Napoleon -based Ice Creations, will oversee the sand sculpture projects for the fourth year. They are one of the most popular features of Sand-Tastic!.

“I went to culinary school to be a chef and my last year of college I took a bunch of sculpture classes,” Hartson

said. “It was something I loved to do and had a passion for so I forgot about the culinary stuff I was doing — other than ice carving — and focused on the sculpture side of things.”

The sand sculptures take three days to finish, with Hartson working on them 10-12 hours each day. In the past, he’s carved everything from a “Toy Story” scene to a prisoner of war to an elephant.

“For a lot of artists, the stuff we do is ‘not really art.’ My challenge to them

is ‘Let me see you do it,’” Hartson said. “It may not be your typical form of art — not paintings or drawings — but it is art. The art world is so vast and sand is one of those forms that people don’t really think of as art until they see it as an elaborate display.”

Pogan said that Levis Commons has hosted parking lot parties, wine tastings and 5K races but the “art-in-spired events” typically draw the big-gest crowds. Last year, despite pouring rain on Saturday, Levis Commons’

traffic counter counted about 15,000 attendees at Sand-Tastic!. However, this year’s event organizers said they hope to attract 15,000 - 20,000 people to the event.

“There’s nothing like it in our area. You can have it be one giant play date,” Pogan said. “Kids are getting out of school and need a reason to get to-gether with friends and parents will be able to catch up with each other, too, while their kids are busy playing.

Levis Commons summer festival returns June 27-28.

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Page 16: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

Sculptures at Sand-Tastic! will be on display for about a week.PHOTO AND STAR COVER PHOTO COURTESY LEVIS COMMONS

ToledoFreePress.comA Toledo tradition since 2005 June 22, 2014Star16

“This is a great environment for reuniting.”

Activities for children include a John Deere Gator track with minia-ture mobile tractors, bounce houses, water tables with squirt guns, a com-munity sandbox, obstacle courses, and hands-on science games courtesy of Imagination Station.

For especially eager sandcastle builders, free lessons from profes-sional sand sculptors will be offered in the community sandbox on Friday and Saturday from 2-2:45 p.m.

In addition, live music entertain-ment will be provided by DJ Paul Her-nandez on Friday from 3-8 p.m. and by Jeff Stewart on Saturday from 2-4 p.m. The Toledo School of Arts’ Steel Drum Band will perform on Saturday from 6-8 p.m.

Businesses at Levis Commons plan to have normal business hours throughout the weekend and en-courage visitors to take a break from the heat and check out their shops.

“People just have so much fun with the sun and sand sculptures and friends at Sand-Tastic!,” Hartson said. “The sand sculptures will be up at Levis Commons for about a week before they get taken down. Sand is a disposable art where it eventually has to get taken down. For me, the creating process is what’s most im-portant. There’s this excitement that goes into creating a sculpture and seeing it finished. I want everyone to have that same experience — watching something beautiful built before your eyes.” O

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Page 17: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

Maggie Bauman of Grumpy’s will drive the Grumpy’s On The Go food truck. TOLEDO FREE PRESS PHOTO bY KIM SANCHEz

ToledoFreePress.com A Toledo tradition since 2005June 22, 2014 Star 17

By Danielle StantonToledo Free Press NeWs ediTor

[email protected]

Grumpy’s, the popular Downtown eatery known for its Garbage Salad, will soon be trucking the favorite meal around Toledo in its new food truck, called Grumpy’s On The Go.

Starting June 21, the Grumpy’s On The Go truck will be parked 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Saturday at lo-cations yet to be announced, and will be stocked solely with the eatery’s signature Garbage Salad, said the truck’s driver, Maggie Bauman, whose mother and aunt own the 30-year-old business.

“Our main seller is the Garbage Salad and our clientele is the work crowd and we can only cater to Downtown,” Bauman said. “There’s Perrysburg and Sylvania people who can’t eat Down-town on their lunch break and there’s such a demand for it. This is a perfect venue to get people what they want and they want the Garbage Salad.”

On Saturdays, the truck will be parked outside Grumpy’s at 34 S. Huron St., from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., but during the week, Bauman said she is still trying to nail down locations.

“As of now it’s definitely going to be Harold Jaffe Jewelers on Talmadge Road one day a week,” Bauman said. “We would definitely like to spread out and

be at different places every day.”On Thursdays the truck will park at

Arrowhead Park in Maumee and Bauman has also reached out to ProMedica about adding hospitals to the schedule.

“I’ve been in touch with the ad-ministration and right now, they are creating a system-wide policy for hos-pitals regarding food trucks so they said they’d get back to me in a couple weeks,” Bauman said.

Finding locations is a “tricky” busi-ness, she said, because Grumpy’s doesn’t want to “step on anyone’s toes.” Their goal is to find locations with parking lots, she said.

The food truck will sell only pre-packaged Garbage Salads made at the Downtown deli.

The signature Garbage Salad comes in four varieties: regular, vegetarian, vegan and gluten-free. Toppings in-clude bacon, chicken, tomato, onion, mushroom, raisins, croutons and four cheeses. The salad comes with a home-made poppy seed dressing.

All salad toppings will come on the side of the pre-packaged salads, Bauman said. Cookies, soda and water will also be available for purchase.

Grumpy’s got the truck in March and has since been outfitting it to be ready for customers. On June 10, it was being vinyl-wrapped.

Grumpy’s On the Go food truck hits the road

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Page 18: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

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“We are your neighbors, friends and family. Our kids play together. We listen when you are sad, mad and happy — and when you are hungry, we feed you and your family the food that we made with our own two hands. When you are thirsty, we are the first to sit and share a pint and laugh along with you or just offer company. And at the end of the day, we watch the same sunset from the same view. We are local.” – Tony Bilancini, Owner of Swig Restaurant

The truck also needed to pass an inspection by the health department, Bauman said.

Grumpy’s is owned by Bauman’s mother, Sara Bauman, and Bauman’s aunt, Jennifer Shemak.

Bauman is the third generation to come into the business that was started by her grandmother, Connie Horn, and her husband, Jeff, at their hard-ware store on Broadway Street in 1984.

“My grandparents had a hardware store and [Shemak] opened up a deli counter in back of Horn Hardware,” Bauman said. “That’s why some of the classic food is named after tools. They were doing so well with the food bar, they closed down the hardware store and opened up Grumpy’s.”

When Bauman’s grandmother died four years ago, Bauman’s mother returned to Toledo from New York, where Bauman was born and raised, to take over ownership

of Grumpy’s with Shemak.“So the third generation is coming

in and growing the business in this direction [the food truck] so it’s very exciting,” Bauman said. “There’s just so much to learn from this experi-ence. So when I found myself back in Toledo, it just made sense. It’s an incredible opportunity and I’m so blessed to have my family business.”

Bauman will announce future locations of the food truck on Face-book, Twitter and Instagram. O

n GRUMPY’S CONTINUED FROM 17

oledo native Sasha P. has al-ways had the “It” factor.

She is blessed with a beau-tiful voice with a range that will

give you goosebumps. Sasha started her paid singing ca-reer at 5 years old. She honed her skills singing in the church and as a teen she became serious about recording and discovered her talent for songwriting.

Her first project produced a local hit single, “Beat the Block,” that re-mained in rotation on The Juice 107.3 for weeks. Although Sasha possessed plenty of vocal ex-perience, she rec-ognized that she lacked life ex-perience. After high school she took time off to go to school, figure things out and find her place in life.

Now 10 years later as a full-grown woman, mother and a teacher, Sasha has experience and is ready to share her heart with all the fans who never stopped believing in her talent.

After everything she has been through, you can only imagine the anticipation for her birthday/EP release party last month where the city came out to support her new EP, “No More Questions.” It has some of the year’s best features from Toledo’s most talented musicians.

Martini Rox: For women who think they can’t do it, tell me how you are able to balance recording and motherhood?

Sasha P.: It’s hard, it’s hard. When the [release party] event was over I definitely had to shout out to my parents. They were like, “Sasha, if this is something that you really want to do, we are going to help you with your daughter; we know that you are a single mom. If this is what you want to put in your heart to do and invest in, then we are going to

stand behind you.” If you do not have that support system to back you up, it becomes challenging.

I’ve had a lot of restless nights. I work a full-time job and I’m in the studio at 3 o’clock

in the morning and then when I get off work I have to tend to my daughter and make sure she’s OK.

[When she was hospitalized, I still had] to meet these engagements. I could not have done it without

my family at all, even my sister was able to step up and lend a helping hand.

Martini Rox: Your last release was 10 years ago. How would you describe your music now?

Sasha P.: My music is very real. I was very honest on my album and I was very afraid to put it out because I feel I was a little too honest. I had to experi-

ence life and I’ve experienced it definitely. The ups and downs and the roller coasters and every-thing you can possibly experience, I went through it and I express ev-erything in this album. I try to be as honest and as real as possible. I’m a very shy person. I’m a very private person. Releasing this album was very scary for me.

I’m surprised that people still be-lieve in me and they really, really sup-port me. I haven’t done music or re-leased anything in about 10 years so to have people say, “Yes! You’re doing it! Don’t stop this time!” That was enough for me to say, “I’m not going to stop.” I almost cried on my release date be-cause of the response that I got. A lot of times it brings me to tears and it’s kind of overwhelming.

Download the EP, “No More Questions,” available on iTunes. As we continue on ... O

Against all oddsSasha P. has the ‘It’ factor.

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Two young children run around with corn dogs. Car-amel apple lollipops pass from hand to hand. This is not the picture that immediately comes to mind when one thinks of a practice session for a rock band like OnceOver.

This band has been around for al-most 15 years, frontman Steve Dwyer said in a recent interview, so the atmo-sphere is far different than the tradi-tional rock ’n’ roll setting.

“If our band was a kid, it would be getting their temps,” Dwyer said. “It would start getting their license soon.”

This year, the band plans to re-lease its sixth album, “White Raven,” alongside Tropic Bombs, another band that Dwyer and bandmate Nick Archer play in. The release concert was slated for June 20 at Toledo’s Mainstreet Bar & Grill.

The original OnceOver was founded in 2001, and has gone through multiple member changes throughout the years. The current members are Dwyer, his brother Paul Dwyer on guitar, Colin de Saint Victor on guitar, Archer on bass and Bruce Stelter on drums.

Dwyer and his brother have a musical past, as their father is an alumnus of Berklee College of Music. He

holds a bachelor’s degree in composition and a master’s in guitar performance.

“We grew up in environments that were very music-savvy,” Dwyer said.

“Most people kinda have a passion for music from a super-young age, I was one of those people,” de Saint Victor said. “I started playing guitar in maybe fifth grade and I spent countless hours playing when I was younger

and just never quit.”De Saint Victor and Dwyer said

their fellow members have little or no formal training for the instruments they chose to play in this band.

“[Dwyer] had high school stuff at least, like orchestra, choir, that kind of stuff,” de Saint Victor said.

“[Archer] took a little bit of guitar lessons when he was a kid but, other than that, I think it’s safe to say we were all self-taught.” Dwyer said.

Dwyer and de Saint Victor talked about their fan base as it is now.

“We’re like 30 and people our age don’t really go to shows,” Dwyer said.

“The fan base stays the same age, almost,” de Saint Victor said.

Some of their mainstay fans go to great lengths to show their loyalty, from bringing their now-adult children to shows to getting tattoos of the band’s logo on their bodies.

OnceOver was formed in 2001. PHOTO COURTESY ONCEOVER

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Page 20: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

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“I would say we’ve always had this core set of fans that are super die-hard but on the outer shell of that there’s been a lot of weird fluc-tuation,” Dwyer said.

The group also jokes that they have had their share of interesting fan experiences, from injuries to pregnancies and all sorts of strange behavior in between.

De Saint Victor said the chal-lenges of OnceOver do not mirror the challenges of younger bands that fight over creative differences or get tired of seeing one another.

“We’ve been together for so long the challenges now are way different than the challenges when we were 20,” de Saint Victor said. “Every-body’s got kids. It’s mostly an issue now with scheduling and making time in our lives to still do this.”

The new album focuses on over-coming life challenges, from death to addiction to dealing with bullies in the professional world.

“Kind of assessing and taking a step back, understanding some of the darker parts of your life and learning to grow from them,” Dwyer said. “Whether that be the death of a family member or a per-sonal struggle and overcoming what seems to be insurmountable.”

Following “The Prelude,” the album begins with a song titled “The Death of You,” and ends with “The Locus of Control.”

“[The first track is] semi-inspira-tional but comes from a dark place,”

n ONCEOVER CONTINUED FROM 19Dwyer said. “The end of the album is kind of a positive note where it’s like you’re in control of your life.”

Musical inspiration comes from the members of the band coming together, not necessarily all at once, to conceptualize, write and play.

“I’d say our songs come from an inception point,” Dwyer said.“We work on songs together but nor-mally it comes from one or two ideas that kind of sprout something.”

“Every song is definitely not started and ended with everybody’s input, which is probably the way it should be,” de Saint Victor said.

Paul said their goal with this album is not fame and fortune, but sharing their music with the audience that made them the band they are today.

“We’re not trying, at this point,

to make money off of it,” Paul said. “We’re really just into getting people into the music and kind of net-working with people and bands.”

The group will work on an ex-panded touring schedule, within drivable distance.

“We have little pockets of fans in a lot of the cities around us,” Ar-cher said. “This year, we’re trying to make a little more of an effort to play out of town.”

The next year will also see a little bit of separation followed by endless hours dedicated to their next record, which is already in process.

“It’s some of our best stuff ever, I would say,” Dwyer said. “It needs a lot of work and we’re not that far into it.”

“As soon as we release an album, it just repeats,” de Saint Victor added. O

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Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø

BAD CREDIT?NO CREDIT?

CALL 419-297-9709 or 419-345-5259

AND DRIVE TODAY!

CALL KJNS ENTERPRISES419-297-9709419-345-5259

’96 HONDA CIVIC........................................................$1,200’01 OLDS ALERO NICE................................................$1,500’01 ISUZU RODEO 79K..............................................$2,450’99 DODGE DURANGO..........................................$2,950’02 VOLVO X70 WAGON......................................$2,950’00 S-10 128K MILES.............................................$2,950’03 CHEVY BLAZER 4X4.........................................$2,950 ’99 DURANGO 107K.....................................................$3,350’03 CADILLAC DEVILLE 120K............................$3,450’03 MONTE CARLO...................................................$3,500’02 SATURN SL2..........................................................$3,500’05 PONT. BONNEVILLE......................................$3,950’02 VW BETTLE Auto, MooN..................................$3,950’04 FORD EXPEDITION XLT..............................$3,950’05 PONT BONNEVILLE LoAdEd.....................$3,950 ’04 HONDA CIVIC LX...............................................$4,450’04 CADILLAC DEVILLE........................................$4,950 ’05 FORD ESCAPE.....................................................$5,850’03 FORD F-150 EXT/CAB..................................$5,950 ’06 HONDA CIVIC 2DR. COUPE................$6,950 ’02 LEXUS ES 300....................................................$6,950’05 CADILLAC CTS LoAdEd, 114K.....................$6,950’08 SATURN VUE Awd..............................................$7,950

DRIVETODAY!

7444 FREmoNT PIKE • PERRySbuRg, oH

Page 21: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

Sponsored by:

(((((((((((((What’s what, where and when in NW Ohio

June20 -28, 2014THE PuLSe

Compiled by Matt Liasseevents are subject to change.

MuSICBar 145ºFeaturing burgers, bands and bourbon, if its slogan is to be believed. $5 cover. 5304 Monroe St. (419) 593-0073 or bar145toledo.com.O FU5ION: June 20.O Killer Flamingos: June 21.O Dan Fester: June 26.

Barr’s Public HouseFeaturing craft beer, hand-crafted specialty drinks and martinis, a well-rounded wine se-lection and an eclectic food menu. 3355 Bri-arfield Blvd., Maumee. (419) 866-8466.O Ryan Dunlap: 9 p.m. to midnight June 20.O Elixir: 9 p.m. to midnight June 21.O Josh Whitney: 8-11 p.m. June 26.

Bronze Boar20 S. Huron St. (419) 244-2627 or www.bron-zeboar.com.O Open mic: Thursdays and Mondays.O Quickness: June 20.O Crucial 420: June 21.O Steve Finelli and Oliver Roses: June 23.O Steve Kennedy: June 26.

Brown Bag Concert SeriesThis free concert series is sponsored by the To-ledo-Lucas County Public Library. North Lawn of Main Library, 325 N. Michigan St.O Elixer: 12:15 – 1:15 p.m. June 25.

Dégagé Jazz CaféSignature drinks plus live local jazz performers. 301 River Road, Maumee. $5 weekends for cafe seating. (419) 794-8205 or www.degage jazzcafe.com.O Cynthia Kaay-Bennett: June 20.O Paul Vornhagen: June 21.O Gene Parker: June 24.O Gene Parker & Friends: June 25.O Damen Cook: June 26.

The DistilleryThe mic is open on Sundays, but paid en-tertainers rock out Fridays-Saturdays. 4311 Heatherdowns Blvd. (419) 382-1444 or www.thedistilleryonline.com.O Live Trivia with DJ Brandon: Tuesdays.O The Bridges: June 20-21.O Name That Tune: June 25.O Ginger Love: June 26.

Doc Watson’s1515 S. Byrne Road. (419) 389-6003 or doc-watsonstoledo.com.ODFR: 10 p.m. June 20.OAndrew Ellis: 10 p.m. June 21.O Sporcle Live Trivia: 8:30 and 9:30 p.m. June 26.

Durty BirdA full bar featuring frozen drinks and multiple happy hours (4-7 p.m.) on weekdays, plus salads, soups and sandwiches, accompany live entertainment four nights a week. 2 S. St. Clair St. (419) 243-2473 or yeoldedurtybird.com.O Hepcat Revival: 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. June 20.O Pin Up Project: 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. June 21.O Estar Cohen Project: 1-4 p.m. June 22.O The New Mondays: 7-10 p.m. June 23.O Lori Lefevre-Johnson: 8-11 p.m. June 24.O Dean Tartaglia: 8-11 p.m. June 25.O Fish Fisher: 6-8 p.m. and 9 p.m. to midnight June 26.

Eddie Boggs: A Tribute of SongA tribute concert celebrating the late musician and retired educator Eddie Boggs. Featuring performances by Bob Wurst & Sundown, David Browning, Jean Holden, First Creation, Tim Ellis & Flatland Grass and Sam DeArmond followed by a musical jam. In lieu of tickets, donations will be accepted for The Victory Center. 2-6 p.m. June 22, Lourdes University Franciscan Center, 6832 Convent Blvd., Sylvania.

ElixerThis two-man band (Dave Rybaczewski and Walter Guy) performs Beatles songs acoustically. www.beatlesebooks.com/elixir.O Table Forty 4, 610 Monroe St., 9:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. June 20.O Barr’s Public House, 3355 Briarfield Blvd., 9

p.m. to midnight June 21.O Ye Olde Cock ‘n Bull, 9 N. Huron St., 9 p.m. to midnight June 24.O Main Library “Brown Bag Lunch Series” 325 N. Michigan St., 12:15-1:15 p.m. June 25.O Backyard BBQ & Booze, 2600 W. Sylvania Ave., June 26.

EvolutionA club “for the mature crowd,” Evolution offers $5 martinis on Thursdays and the occasional live musical performance. 519 S. Reynolds Road. (419) 725-6277 or clubevolutiontol.com.O Feel Good Fridays: Fridays.O Sensational Saturdays: Saturdays.

The Flying JoeCoffeehouse with a shot of music. 2130 Preston Parkway, Perrysburg. (419) 931-0273 or www.theflyingjoe.com.O Open Mic Night with Ol’ Creek Road: 7-9 p.m. June 21.

Frankie’s Inner-CityToledo’s venue for rock. Tickets vary between $5 and $14, unless otherwise noted. 308 Main St. (419) 693-5300 or www.FrankiesInnerCity.com.O The Convalescence, Goodnight Irene, De-throne The Deceiver, Forbidden Outcome, Vile Hence and Black Martyr: June 21.O Hatchet and Contricted: June 23.

Glass City CaféThis small venue offers musical accompaniment for its Saturday brunches. 10 a.m., 1107 Jackson St. (419) 241-4519 or www.glasscitycafe.com.O Musical Brunch with Tim Oehlers and spe-cial guests: 10 a.m. June 21.

Hollywood Casino ToledoThe Hollywood Casino offers musical distrac-tions from all the lights, noise and jackpots. 777 Hollywood Blvd. (419) 661-5200 or www.hollywoodcasinotoledo.com.O Chevelle, 9 p.m. June 20, Hollywood Con-cert Series, $30.O In Theory: June 20, H Lounge.O FU5ION: June 21, H Lounge.

Jazz on the MaumeeThe Art Tatum Jazz Society will provide smooth,

cool “Twilight Jazz” along the river, appetizers included. 5:30-7:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Grand Plaza Hotel’s Aqua Lounge, 444 N. Summit St. $5-$15. (419) 241-1411, arttatumsociety.com.O Brad McNett & Chris Buzzelli: June 25.

Lair Lounge3332 Glendale Ave. (419) 385-7850.O Crossover Band: June 20.O Karaoke/Toledo BBW Who’s Your Daddy Fa-ther’s Day Tribute Party: June 21.O Lucas County Blues Open Stage: June 25.

Music at the MarketThis 12-concert outdoor series runs in con-junction with the Perrysburg Farmers Market. Commodore School Yard, Perrysburg. 7-8:30 p.m. Thursdays.O Velvet Jones: June 26.

Name That TuneO The Oarhouse, 5044 Suder Ave.: 8-10 p.m. Mondays, 6-8:30 p.m. Fridays.O Ralphie’s Sports Eatery, 6609 Airport Hwy.: 8-10 p.m. Tuesdays.O Jed’s Barbeque and Brew, 855 S. Holland-Sylvania Road: 6-8 p.m. Wednesdays.O Pat & Dandy’s Sports Bar & Grill, 3344 W. Laskey Road: 9-11 p.m. Wednesdays. O Ralphie’s Sports Eatery, 5702 Monroe St.: 7-9 p.m. Thursdays.

One2 Lounge at TREOLive music starts at 7:30 p.m. 5703 Main St., Sylvania. (419) 882-2266 or treosylvania.com.O Swingmania: June 20.O Post Modern Blues Band: June 21.

Ottawa TavernCasual meals and bingo and trivia nights with weekend entertainment. 1815 Adams St. (419) 725-5483 or www.otavern.com.O SoldierSide: A Tribute to System of a Down: June 20.O Sleep Fleet with Eternally Dizzy: June 21.

Potbelly Sandwich Shop4038 Talmadge Road. (419) 725-5037 or www.potbelly.com.O Jaime Mills: Noon-2 p.m. Fridays.

SWINGMANIAWith its focus on swing music, Jeff McDonald’s group of musicians provides a peek into another era. (419) 708-0265, (419) 874-0290 or www.swingmania.org.O Trotters Tavern, 5131 Heatherdowns Blvd., (419) 381-2079: 8 p.m. Tuesdays.

The Village IdiotTunes combined with pizza and booze, some would say it’s a perfect combination. 309 Conant St., Maumee. (419) 893-7281 or www.villageidiotmaumee.com.O The House Band: 6 p.m. Fridays.O Bob Rex Band: 6 p.m. Sundays.O Dooley Wilson: Sundays.O Frankie May and friends: 10 p.m. Mondays.O John Barile & Bobby May: 8 p.m. Tuesdays.O The Womack Family Band: June 20.O Hunchback Joyride: June 21.O Alex Kates: June 26.

Ye Olde Cock n’ BullAt one of Toledo’s newest gathering places, customers can find 30 draught beer selec-tions and daily drink specials. They promise live entertainment seven days of the week. 9 N. Huron St. (419) 244-2855 or facebook.com/cocknbulltoledo.O Bobby May and John Barile followed by 10 Year Reign: June 20.O Rivets: June 21.O Dick Lange Blues Jam: June 22.O Elixer: June 24.O Danny Mettler hosts Open Mic Night: June 25.O Captain Sweet Shoes: June 26.

If you would like your event in The Pulse, contact Matt at [email protected]

ToledoFreePress.com A Toledo tradition since 2005June 22, 2014 Star 21

Come to

The Blarney ...Go From There!

601 Monroe St.Right Across from Fifth Third Field

Live Entertainment

Thurs-Fri-Sat

HAPPY HOURMon-Fri 4-7 pm

facebook.com/blarneytoledowww.theblarneyeventcenter.com

PREMIER DOWNTOWN EVENT AND RECEPTION CENTER

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WE’LL CUSTOMIZE FOR YOU Fundraisers • Holiday Parties • Celebrations

Reunions • Sports Banquets • Corporate RetreatsSummer Picnics • Employee Appreciation Events

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Thursday, June 26thDean TartagliaFriday, June 27th

MAS FiNA Saturday, June 28th

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Page 22: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

By Matt LiasseToledo Free Press sTaFF WriTer

[email protected]

When their first Kickstarter cam-paign failed to raise $60,000 in De-cember, Ben and Cassy Vollmar went right back to work to get their poten-tial future coffee shop open.

Although “bummed” about the campaign, Ben said he was excited to see the community begin to jump on board with his project.

Since December, community members and other coffee connois-seurs have approached Ben and of-fered help.

“A lot of people reached out and because of that, we found other in-vestors, which is part of the reason why this Kickstarter has a lower goal,” Ben said.

Ben said he appreciated the help of the community members, especially since the first Kickstarter campaign didn’t have much social media pres-ence behind it — another difference about his current campaign.

Ben said the new campaign looks a lot better because of what he learned from the unsuccesful one.

The couple’s current campaign, which ends at 6 p.m. June 22, aims to raise $20,000.

If the goal is met, the couple plans to open Flatlands Coffee at 138 N. Main St. in Bowling Green, in the same strip as On the Edge Tattoo Studio and Finders Records.

Together, the two want to offer “an authentic coffee experience.”

“[Our vision is] just to create a welcoming, creativity-inducing at-mosphere where customers can really enjoy the uppermost quality in terms

of service and product,” he said. “Our mission is to bring the best in the country to Bowling Green, Ohio.”

The couple has added to their original business model which, Ben said, sets them apart from other coffee shops on a national scale.

“We have made good partner-ships with numerous roasters,” he said. “We’ve been researching for so many years and we’ve found just outstanding roasters.

“What we plan on doing, from season to season because coffee is such an agricultural product … we will taste all different roasters and pick the best of the best and bring those coffees into our shop.

“That concept has been done and is being done by coffee subscriptions out there. ... It’s a pretty big fast-growing trend,” Ben said.

“It’s getting a lot of attention and people like to know that they’re getting top-quality, but ironically it’s never been done in a coffee shop setting.”

The couple has even picked some early favorites including Kilenso Mokonisa, an Ethiopian roast from Counter Culture; Las Mingas, a Co-lombian from Cuvee; and Costa Rica Los Lobos from Populace.

Ben said the first Kickstarter only reached out to locals in Bowling Green. With this one, the Vollmars are trying to maximize their success by sharing how this makes them unique to the industry.

“At this point, most of our backers are from all across the country,” Ben said.

The coffee shop would offer many different brewing methods, including a siphon pot (Ben’s favorite), pour-

overs and an espresso machine. “We’re always trying to perfect,

tweak and make the coffee taste to its

best capability,” he said. For more information, visit www.

kickstarter.com/projects/960621923/

flatlands-coffee.At press time, the project had

raised $14,899. O

ToledoFreePress.comA Toledo tradition since 2005 June 22, 2014Star22

Newlyweds try again for ‘authentic coffee experience’ in BG

Effective 06/23/14-06/29/14. We reserve the right to limit quantities. No sales to vendors. » Not responsible for pictorial or typographical errors.

3320 Briarfield Blvd., Maumee » 419.794.4000 » Hours: Mon-Sat 7:30 a.m.–9 p.m. Sun 8 a.m.–9 p.m. 26625 N. Dixie Hwy., Perrysburg » 419.872.6900 » Hours: Mon-Sun 7 a.m.– 10 p.m.

3320 Briarfield Blvd., Maumee » 419.794.4000 » Hours: Mon-Sat 7:30 a.m.–9 p.m. Sun 8 a.m.–9 p.m. 26625 N. Dixie Hwy., Perrysburg » 419.872.6900 » Hours: Mon-Sun 7 a.m.– 10 p.m.

www.waltchurchillsmarket.comwww.waltchurchillsmarket.comFacebook @ waltchurchillsmarket » Twitter @ waltchurchillsFacebook @ waltchurchillsmarket » Twitter @ waltchurchills

Effective 06/23/14-06/29/14. We reserve the right to limit quantities. No sales to vendors. » Not responsible for pictorial or typographical errors.

Cook out with Dave3:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. on Fridays

Perrysburg Location Only

— on Friday nights —

at WCm maumee With CheF toby! Come in and pick up our sizzling Bratwursts,

Pesto Chicken Breast or Portabella Mushroom Burger.

every saturday in June from 12-4

Items rIghtoFF the grIll!Baby Back ribs,grilled Boneless skinless Chicken Breast, tall grass

hamburgers, Natural Casing

hot DogsSides Available:

Cole Slaw, Macaroni Salad or Potato Salad

SaturdaysFresh

oFF theGrill!

Page 23: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.com A Toledo tradition since 2005June 22, 2014 TV Listings 23

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Sunday Morning June 22, 20148 am 8:30 9 am 9:30 10 am 10:30 11 am 11:30 12 pm 12:30

ABC 13 Good Morning News This Week Conklin 2014 FIFA World Cup: Group HCBS 11 News Leading CBS News Sunday Morning (N) Face the Nation (N) Mass Derm Fix HairFOX 36 Larry King Paid Prog. Fox News Sunday Young Outages Hip Hop Power Tummy SurgeonNBC 24 Today (N) (CC) Meet the Press (N) Van Impe Paid Prog. GT Worx Outages Paid Prog. OutagesPBS 30 Super WordWrld Peg Dinosaur Toledo Toledo Jake Shimabukuro Antiques Roadshow

A&E Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Longmire (CC) Longmire (CC) ››› Hellboy (2004) BRAVO The People’s Couch Million Dollar Listing NeNe--Wedding NeNe--Wedding NeNe--Wedding

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ABC 13 General Hospital Katie Ellen DeGeneres News News News ABC NewsCBS 11 The Talk Let’s Make a Deal Dr. Phil News at Five News CBS NewsFOX 36 Judge Mathis The People’s Court Maury Access H. Minute TMZ NewsNBC 24 The Test Millionaire Millionaire The Doctors The Dr. Oz Show News NBC NewsPBS 30 Varied Programs Cyberchas News NewsHour

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WTO5 ’70s Show ’70s Show Bill Cunningham Rules Commun Rules Two Men Big Bang Mod Fam

Sunday Afternoon / Evening June 22, 20141 pm 1:30 2 pm 2:30 3 pm 3:30 4 pm 4:30 5 pm 5:30 6 pm 6:30 7 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30

ABC 13 FIFA World C. SportCtr 2014 FIFA World Cup: Group H World of X Games News ABC Wipeout “Fall in the Family” (N) (CC) Rising Star (N) (CC) News InsiderCBS 11 Paying Earn Big H.S. Basketball PGA Tour Golf Travelers Championship, Final Round. (N) (CC) News News 60 Minutes (N) (CC) Elementary (CC) The Good Wife (CC) The Mentalist (CC) News CriminalFOX 36 Clean Outages Best Cook Paid Paid Bones (CC) Burn Notice (CC) Mother Mother Enlisted American Simpsons Simpsons Fam. Guy American News Leading Arsenio HallNBC 24 Pain Free Perf. Yard Auto Racing Golf U.S. Women’s Open Championship, Final Round. (N) (CC) News News American Ninja Warrior “Dallas Qualifying” America’s Got Talent Auditions continue. News Jdg JudyPBS 30 Woods. W’dwright Kitchen Sewing Independent Lens On Story Just Seen Charlie Ohio Moyers Weekend NOVA (CC) Secrets-London Masterpiece Mystery! (N) Preview Austin City Limits

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ABC 13 Ent Insider The Bachelorette (N) (CC) Mistresses (N) (CC) News J. KimmelCBS 11 Wheel Jeopardy! Broke Girl Mom (CC) Mike Two Men Under the Dome News LettermanFOX 36 The Office Simpsons MasterChef (N) 24: Live Another Day Fox Toledo News Arsenio HallNBC 24 Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Last Comic Standing American Ninja Warrior “Denver Qualifying” News J. FallonPBS 30 NewsHour Business Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow POV “When I Walk” (N) (CC) On Story

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ABC 13 Ent Insider Extreme Weight Loss “Bruce” (N) (CC) Celebrity Wife Swap News J. KimmelCBS 11 Wheel Jeopardy! NCIS “Bulletproof” NCIS: Los Angeles Person of Interest News LettermanFOX 36 The Office Simpsons Fam. Guy Brooklyn Brooklyn Mindy Fox Toledo News Arsenio HallNBC 24 Jdg Judy Jdg Judy America’s Got Talent Auditions continue. (N) The Night Shift (N) News J. FallonPBS 30 NewsHour Business The March (CC) Freedom Summer: American Experience (N) Charlie Rose (N) (CC)

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Page 24: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.comA Toledo tradition since 2005 June 22, 2014TV Listings24

Wednesday Evening June 25, 20147 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30

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ABC 13 Ent Insider Black Box “Free Will” Rookie Blue (N) (CC) NY Med (N) (CC) News J. KimmelCBS 11 Wheel Jeopardy! Big Bang Millers Big Brother (N) (CC) Elementary (CC) News LettermanFOX 36 The Office Simpsons Hell’s Kitchen (N) Gang Related (N) Fox Toledo News Arsenio HallNBC 24 Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Game Night Undate Undate Last Comic Standing News J. FallonPBS 30 NewsHour Business Toledo Toledo Masterpiece Mystery! (CC) (DVS) Great Performances (CC)

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Friday Evening June 27, 20147 pm 7:30 8 pm 8:30 9 pm 9:30 10 pm 10:30 11 pm 11:30

ABC 13 Ent Insider Shark Tank (CC) What Would You Do? 20/20 (CC) News J. KimmelCBS 11 Wheel Jeopardy! Undercover Boss (CC) Hawaii Five-0 (CC) Blue Bloods (CC) News LettermanFOX 36 The Office Simpsons MasterChef Rake “Mammophile” Fox Toledo News Arsenio HallNBC 24 Jdg Judy Jdg Judy Dateline NBC (N) (CC) Crossbones (N) News J. FallonPBS 30 NewsHour Business Wash Deadline Great Performances at the Met Puccini’s “La Boheme.” Sun Stud

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Saturday Morning June 28, 20148 am 8:30 9 am 9:30 10 am 10:30 11 am 11:30 12 pm 12:30

ABC 13 Good Morning News Hanna Ocean Explore 2014 FIFA World CupCBS 11 Your Morning Saturday (N) (CC) Recipe J. Oliverr All In Changers Paid Prog. Paid Prog.FOX 36 Wild Am. Aqua Kids Eco Co. Hollywood Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Kids News McCarverNBC 24 Today (N) (CC) Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Chica Noodle Justin Tree Fu LazyTown Zou (EI)PBS 30 Super WordWrld Peg Dinosaur MotorWk Our Ohio Wild Ohio Out Mag. Nature (CC) (DVS)

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Page 25: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.com A Toledo tradition since 2005June 22, 2014 Comics & Games 25

n ANSWERS FOUND ON A48

Aries (March 21-April 19)

Women are a part of important events this week. Offers and ideas conveyed by women will be highly influential. New outlets for creative potential are dangled under your nose, but evaluate these cautiously. Remain true to yourself; don’t get pulled off course by relationship dramas. Taurus (April 20-May 20)

Changing conditions around work and co-workers continue; upheavals are possible. Tasks or phases must be completed by August, but it seems like wheels are spinning for naught. A property or domestic situation hits critical mass after Wednesday. Better choices begin to emerge. Gemini (May 21-June 21)

Your feelings are on a switch; some are being turned off, no longer endurable. More attractive options are available. Decisions about money, possessions, and commitments may have life-changing effects. Strong attractions lead you down new paths as the weekend arrives. Cancer (June 22-July 22)

Personal and life-path situations are at a tipping point. Sudden changes around job or family members rivet your attention. Evaluate feelings of obligation; make sure efforts will be appreciated before acting. Discover critical hidden goals through talking to others. Leo (July 23-August 22)

This week brings an influx of social activities around family and friends. Information overloads are possible. Inner knowledge struggles to reach conscious awareness. Look for hidden interconnections after Thursday. Friends beckon you toward cutting-edge projects.Virgo (August 23-September 22)

Connections to people, jobs, and things are at a crossroad. Analysis of choices requires a blend of idealism and pragmatism. Outworn loyalty or sentiment can keep you stuck in the past when the future is calling. Partnership balances require scrutiny and adjustments after Thursday.

Libra (September 23-October 22)

New entertainments and ideas become available. Others may do things that upset your apple cart on Wednesday. If expectations are dashed, future options must be reconsidered. Clever women offer advice. You will have to learn new things to accomplish emerging goals. Scorpio (October 23-November 21)

Transitions, endings and beginnings come in pairs as the week begins. If efforts at repairs get out of hand midweek, it may be time to write off a lost cause. Evaluate the depth of your attachments and obligations. Weekend discussions lure you toward new possibilities. Sagittarius (November 22-December 21)

People come out of the woodwork to request your special talents. Midweek upheavals stir up philosophical questions: right or wrong? Do I or don’t I? External transitions or upsets destabilize prior agreements. Help and understanding arrive on Saturday night. Capricorn (December 22-January 19)

Early in the week, responses stir insecurities about the status of ongoing efforts. Seek interpreters and intermediaries. Past efforts may be overturned by unexpected discoveries and distressing exits. A partner helps restore equilibrium with a holistic, multilevel approach. Aquarius (January 20-February 18)

Ideas and information flood your view as the week starts. Attention is divided, or jobs are juggled. This can lead to errors made in haste; be cautious. Your ability to manage changes in your daily flow is tested. The basis and purpose of relationships is re-evaluated on Saturday. Pisces (February 19-March 20)

Other people’s upsets that happen this week may not be much of a surprise to you. You saw it coming and consequences are playing out as predicted. Pride goes before falls. This is a good weekend for a little road trip. Spend Saturday broadening horizons and landscapes.

AlmanacThird Rock

Events: Venus enters Gemini (23rd); New Moon in Cancer (27th) June 22 – 28, 2014

Your TaroTgram and Horoscope

By elizABeTh hAzel

elizabeth Hazel is a professional tarotist-astrologer and author. she gives readings every Wednesday at attic on adams above manos greek restaurant. she may be contacted at [email protected] (c) 2014

TFP CRosswoRd By dAve deChRisToPheR

ACROSS 1. This Dorr Street Irish pub has a rooftop patio and, often, live music10. Nanny’s offspring11. First team13. The Mud Hens usually play nine15. Beginning of sorts16. Timid17. Its dog-friendly patio has a view of UpTown22. ---- King Cole25. “¿Cómo ----?”28. Bottled spirit31. Heady hangout above Manos’ Restaurant35. South American range36. Decisive win37. “To be or ---- to be …”40. Margarita mecca in Swanton42. Young deer46. Pot top47. Dietrich of classic Hollywood50. Bar where Spanish is spoken52. The enchilada?

53. Gastropub across the street from Fifth Third Field

DOWN 1. Symphony section 2. More than medium 3. Related 4. It’s picked by the picky

5. Sexy Williams of '60s cinema 6. Snub 7. Huge coffee pot 8. “Jeopardy!” whiz Jennings 9. Put up a fight12. Improve, some say

14. “The Addams Family"cousin18. Play beginning19. Halloween swag20. Bird-related21. Pass some gossip23. “Gotcha!”24. Morning break time26. Ave. crossers27. Like about ½ these clues, for short28. Hartebeest29. Sask. neighbor30. Like Jimmy Eat World’s music32. Commercial33. O’Neill widow34. Part of Sohio38. All thumbs39. “Quite so”41. Suffer43. “Why I couldn’t have done it”44. Victory45. Just48. 2104 animated film hit49. Call off50. Steve Taylor sale51. Carol of “Private Parts”

“Patio Dining”

dizzy By deAn hARRis

BiFF & Riley By JeFF PAydenSolutioN, tipS ANd computER pRogRAm At WWW.Sudoku.com

n Sudoku ANSWERS FOUND ON 26

n cRoSSWoRd ANSWERS FOUND ON 26

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10

11 12 13 14

15

16 17 18 19 20

21

22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

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38 39

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Page 26: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

Call 419.241.1700, Ext 230 to place a Classified Ad!

Toledo Free Press publishes classified ads and cannot be responsible for problems arising between parties placing or responding to ads in our paper. We strongly urge everyone to exercise caution when dealing with people, companies and organizations with whom you are not familiar.

All real estate advertised in this paper is subject to the federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, in the sale, rental, or financing of housing. This Publisher will not knowingly accept any advertising that violates any applicable law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this paper are available on an equal opportunity basis. If you believe you have been discriminated against in connection with the sale, rental, or financing of housing, call the Toledo Fair Housing Center, (419) 243-6163.

ToledoFreePress.comA Toledo tradition since 2005 June 22, 2014Classified26

CARLSON’S CRITTERS

A home for QueenieQueenie is a 4-year-old Alaskan

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Toledo Area Humane Society is located at 1920 Indian Wood Circle, Arrowhead Park, Maumee. Adoption hours are noon to 7 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and noon

to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Call (419) 891-0705 or visit www. toledoareahumanesociety.org. O

Queenie

n SUDOKU ANSWERS FROM 25

n CROSSWORD ANSWERS FROM 25M U L V A N E Y S B U N K E RO A K I D L R R E EV A R S I T Y I N N I N G SE G G N G T IM E E K M A N H A T T A N SE R C T R V TN A T E S T A G E N I E T H E A T T I C O N A D A M S A N D E S R O U T N O TC A L I N S AL O M A L I N D A S F A WNU I D O L I DM A R L E N E C A N T I N AS I N E A L L B RY E O L D E D U R T Y B I R D

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HealtHy interactions, llc. seeks Com-puter and Information Researcher for Toledo OH. Résumé: HR. 17 N. St. Clair St. Toledo Oh, 43604. No calls. EOE

education

communiTylegal notices

in tHe cHancery courtFor oVerton county, tennesee

Case No. 13-CV-41

IN RE: Adoption of ANGEL MARIE VLIET date of birth, August 31, 2005

TIMOTHY GLEN SELMAN and wife,DONNA SUE SELMAN,Petitioners,vs.KRISTEN LEE BARNES, MotherEMERSON CHARLES VLIET, Defendant

order For serVice By PuBlication

TO: EMERSON CHARLES VLIET A Petition for Adoption has been filed against you by Timothy and Donna Selman. It appears that ordinary process of law cannot be served upon you because your whereabouts are unknown. It is, therefore, ORDERED that you respond to this notice by filing an answer to the Petition in this cause with the Chancery Court, Overton County, Tennessee and with Daryl A. Colson, Attorney at Law, 808 N. Church Street, Livingston, Tennessee 38570, on or before the date listed below. A copy of the Petition may be obtained from the Clerk and Master of the Chancery Court for Overton County, at Livingston, Tennessee. If no answer is filed by the date shown below, a judgment by default will be taken against you and a hearing to grant a final order will be set without further notice to you. This notice will be published for FOUR (4) consecutive weeks in “Toledo Free Press,” a newspaper published in Toledo, Ohio at 605 Monroe St. 43604. The last date of this publica-tion will be July 13, 2014. An answer must be filed within thirty (30) days of this date.

THIS THE 29TH DAY OF MAY, 2014.

HONORABLE DOROTHY STANTON Clerk & Master of the Chancery Court 100 E. Court Square, P. O. Box 127 Livingston, TN 38570 (931) 823-2536

general emPloyment

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5401 telegraPH toledo oH 436128025 NYCOLE KING 1600 BROOKE PARK APT 5 HOUSEHOLD. 4045 DONALD DEMSKI 1034 SYCAMORE SAN MARCOS TX 78666 HOUSE-HOLD. 7025 SABRINA MCMILLIAN 2449 RULTON HOUSEHOLD. 8053 MONICA CLOSE 1856 S OT-TAWA COVE HOUSEHOLD. 8018 JOSEPH VALLE 2420 BERDAN HOUSEHOLD. 4033 KANEISHA AKINS 245 N SUMMIT #204 HOUSEHOLD.

4601 JacKman rd toledo oH 436122047 WILLIAM MOORE JR 700 KISER APT H9 DE-FIANCE OH 43512 HOUSEHOLD. 6106 BELINDA SCHRECK 2610 BEAUFORT HOUSEHOLD.

7840 sylVania aVe sylVania oH 435604128 HELEN WALKER 9476 COSSCREEK TEM-PERANCE MI 48144 HOUSEHOLD. 2024 THOMA WAITE 2631 MARLA LANE HOUSEHOLD.

10740 airPort HWy sWanton oH 435585074 JERMIAH TATKOWSKI 1972 COUNTY ROAD EF HOUSEHOLD.

3032 airPort HWy toledo oH 436091302 ALEX SZYMANEK 1507 CHESTER HOUSE-HOLD. 2153 NICKOLE KIRK 208 GIBBONS HOUSE-HOLD. 5206 ALMONTA BROWN 1126 WOODRUFF HOUSEHOLD. 6222 CHRISTOPHER CRAIG 2830 ELDORA APT 4 HOUSEHOLD.

communiTyPuBlic notice

TransporT/Tanker Drivertired of driving otr?

Want to be home daily? Want to be paid for all your time?

Join the Crystal Flash Team! transport/tanker driver opportunities in Toledo, OH and Monroe, MI. Deliver gasoline, diesel fuel and/or propane to commercial customers.

We offer: home daily, local, ALL time paid, competitive hourly wage, overtime pay, quar-terly performance bonus, health/dental/vision, immediately eligible for 401k with company match, paid holidays, vacation, personal days and much more!

requirements: CDL-A X endorsement (hazmat/tanker), professional, safety conscious, 1 year tractor-trailer driving experience, clean driving record within past 12 months and experience transporting hazardous materials.

For IMMEDIATE consideration call Cathy Nischan, 800-822-7002, ext. 116. Submit résumés to [email protected] or

FAX to 734-241-5031 or MAIL to 87 Jerome St, Monroe, MI 48161. Visit

http://www.crystalflash.com to download an application. Human Resources:

800-875-4851, ext. 3180.

about crystal Flash™Crystal Flash™ is a third-generation family-owned energy distribution company focused on commercial and residential customers throughout the Lower Peninsula of Michigan. Established in 1932, Crystal Flash has grown as the demand for energy has evolved and to-day concentrates on the sale and distribution of propane, diesel and other fuels. Today, the company is one of the largest independently owned energy suppliers in the state with more than 250 employees in 18 locations.

employmenTdriVer / deliVery / courier

notice is HereBy giVen by the Board of Di-rectors that Sealed Bids will be received by the Toledo-Lucas County Port Authority for:

overLanD inDUsTriaL park Jeep Parkway lighting Project

1000 Jeep Parkway toledo, ohio 43610

This contract is for all labor, material, insurance, and equipment necessary for the OVERLAND IN-DUSTRIAL PARK — Jeep Parkway Lighting Proj-ect located at 1000 Jeep Parkway in Toledo, OH 43610, in accordance with the approved plans and specifications, to the Port Authority at One Maritime Plaza, Toledo, Ohio 43604.Bids will be received at the Port Authority’s ad-ministrative offices at One Maritime Plaza, Toledo, Ohio 43604 until Friday, July, 11th, 2014, at 10:00 AM, at which time and place all bids will be publicly opened and read aloud.The project “OVERLAND INDUSTRIAL PARK - Jeep Parkway Lighting Project” is for Roadway Lighting

along Jeep Parkway for Overland Industrial Park from Central Avenue to the roundabout. Project includes installation of 14 LED lighting units in-cluding luminaires, poles, foundations and pole wiring. Approximately 1900 LF of Conduit and approximately 6300 LF of Distribution Cable will be installed underground. New power service is part of the project. The engineers estimate for this project is $120,000.00.Plans, Specifications, Instructions to Proposers, and Forms of Proposal and Contract are on file and may be obtained by either (1) obtaining hard copies from Becker Impressions, 4646 Angola Road, Toledo, OH 43615, phone 419.385.5303, during normal busi-ness hours, or (2) ordering from Becker Impressions, via their website www.beckerplanroom.com at a non-refundable price of $25.Please note that there will be a pre-bid meeting for all prospective bidders on Thursday, June 26, 2014 at 2:00 PM in the office of the Toledo-Lucas County Port Authority, One Maritime Plaza, Toledo, OH 43604. Attendance is helpful, but not mandatory.

legal notices

Page 27: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.com A Toledo tradition since 2005June 22, 2014 Toledo Free Press 27

Page 28: Toledo Free Press – June 22, 2013

ToledoFreePress.comA Toledo tradition since 2005 June 22, 2014Toledo Free Press28

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